(Not) For Your Eyes Only: Jaguar Land Rover Loses Bid to Squash Defender Lookalike

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Imitation, as the saying goes, is the sincerest form of flattery, but Jaguar Land Rover’s been burned in the past, what with a certain Chinese automaker rolling out near carbon copies of its Range Rover Evoque crossover.

In the Defender lies far more heritage, but JLR just lost a bid to keep the visual rights to the boxy off-road beast in the UK, paving the way for British sales of a model that looks very similar to the much-loved previous-generation model.

As reported by Autocar, a UK court has rejected JLR’s effort to secure trademark rights for the envelope of its old Defender. This is music to chemical firm Ineos’ ears, as it intends to build the Grenadier — a model so steeped in British SUV design history, you’d think it came with a free FN FAL rifle and a land claim in Rhodesia.

Yes, it looks an awful lot like the old Defender, even after Ineos changed the grille to less resemble JLR’s property after the automaker hauled it into court. The legal battle against Ineos has raged for 4 years, with JLR appealing a 2019 ruling that said the Defender’s shape was too common to trademark. This week, the country’s High Court dismissed the appeal, claiming the original “verdict” from the UK’s Intellectual Property Office stands.

From Autocar:

In a statement, JLR noted its disappointment in the ruling, given that the Defender’s shape is already trademarked in a number of other markets. “The Land Rover Defender is an iconic vehicle which is part of Land Rover’s past, present and future,” it said. “Its unique shape is instantly recognisable and signifies the Land Rover brand around the world.”

Ineos responded by saying that the Defender’s design “does not serve as a badge of origin for JLR’s goods” and confirmed it will press ahead with plans to launch the Grenadier in 2021.

In the U.S., JLR was successful in trademarking its Defender design.

As for the actual vehicle itself, there remains some uncertainty about where exactly the Grenadier will be built. Ineos could carry on with its original plan to built it in Portugal before bringing it to the UK for finishing, though it’s reportedly engaged in talks to purchase a future-less Daimler plant in France.

[Image: Ineos]

Steph Willems
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  • Conundrum Conundrum on Aug 06, 2020

    The projected price for this Ineos dinosaur is starting at GBP4Ok for a volume of 25,000 a year. Grenadier. Just rolls right off the tongue, doesn't it? A UK Brexit billionaire named Ratcliffe got Magna to design the chassis, which is supposed to be built in Portugal, with engines and transmissions from that well-known off-road vehicle supplier BMW, suspension of the cart spring variety from Italy, and assembly in the now disused Smart Car factory in France. Time, it's ebbing away for production beginning at the end of next year. By the time this bloke Ratcliffe, swollen with pride at the UK leaving the EU, has something to sell, the only British parts will be the brochure and the stick-on and iron-on decals available for little boys of the train-spotting brigade. And he will no longer be a billionaire but if he's lucky, a millionaire. The shape is trademarked by JLR in the US, so where are the sales to come from to make this thing work? And who were going to be the "lucky" chosen dealers anyway, before that door slammed shut? If one could spell nonsense a different way, it would be Grenadier.

  • Jarred Fitzgerald Jarred Fitzgerald on Aug 10, 2020

    Well, that's China for you, always with the "imitation game." Though I have to give it to JLR for standing up to these brand fakers. Looking at the photo, the design (in spite of the fact that it's a rip off) definitely has a saving grace, in the form of the grille change that Ineos did in order to try to avert the lawsuit. As with the JLR, I don't think I'll have any trouble buying spare tires and wheels as well if I were to fancy an Ineos Grenadier, since they look pretty much the same with the ones I've been buying from 4WheelOnline.

  • Yuda Yeah with all the friggin problems these things have, last thing we need is more of these things messing up and clogging the roads
  • Wjtinfwb Nice car and looks well cared for. The accessories are mostly for vanity, their value is in the eye of the buyer. I see zero value in them but I like bone stock if buying used. The problem this seller has is his spec is not at all unique; not a manual, no Shaker hood, attractive, but conservative color. Today, AutoTrader has 130 used 2015-2018 Challenger Hemi's with automatics available. The average price is abut 27,200 and mileage is slightly lower than this example at about 40k miles. Almost all are at dealers where a decent negotiator should be able to knock $1500-2500 off the ask. This is a 25k car, the buyer may not believe it but stats would say otherwise.
  • FreedMike I don't need to know anything about this model per se, but I'd be very interested in knowing if Mazda is going to be using the tech from the PHEV CX-90/70 model - which is darned nice, by the way - on other Mazdas.
  • Turbo Is Black Magic Honestly at this point Elon is more of a liability than an asset. How much does the board have to pay to just get rid of him?
  • FreedMike The article touches on this fact, but the number of public EV chargers grew by over 18,000 between 2021 and 2023. https://afdc.energy.gov/fuels/electricity-infrastructure-trendsSo clearly the expansion is happening without the use of the funds in question. Not necessarily a bad thing, if you're into not using taxpayer money. Still, I'd be interested in knowing why the public money isn't being used. Are the regs overly complex or restrictive, or something like that? But in any case, EV charging IS expanding at a pretty solid rate. And as far as "...we’ve seen plenty of Republican-backed legislation targeting EV-related spending over the last couple of years" is concerned...well, yeah, there's a reason why Republicans don't like EV charging. The petroleum industry is one of the GOP's prime donors, and every charger built or EV sold represents a direct ding to their bottom line. Republicans, of course, like to put this in terms of "EVs are a woke mind virus," or some such nonsense, but the fact is that the people paying their bills don't want competition.
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